DEC asks hikers to avoid high elevation trails during mud season

The state Department of Environmental Conservation issued its annual muddy trail advisory for the High Peaks today.

Hikers are being asked to avoid hiking on trails above 2,500 feet until high elevation trails have dried and hardened. Snow and ice are currently melting on high elevation trails and steep trails with thin soils are dangerous for hiking and susceptible to erosion, and sensitive alpine vegetation is easily damaged.

Backcountry trails in the highest elevations are still covered in ice and snow. Steep trails with thin soils can become a mix of ice and mud as the ice melts and frost leaves the ground, making the trails slippery and vulnerable to erosion by hikers, according to the DEC. Sensitive alpine vegetation is also easily damaged by hikers attempting to avoid the mud and ice.

Avoiding these trails during mud season helps to alleviate impacts to the trail and adjacent areas.

DEC asks that hikers avoid the following trails until trail conditions improve: